What Black Soldier Fly Farming Is
Black soldier fly farming is the industrial cultivation of Hermetia illucens larvae to convert organic waste into protein-rich biomass for animal feed. The larvae eat food waste, agricultural residues, and other organic substrates. In the process, they reduce waste volume by 39-80% and produce a harvestable biomass that contains 38-52% crude protein on a dry-matter basis. The dried larvae are processed into insect meal and sold to aquaculture, poultry, and pet food manufacturers.
The black soldier fly is not a pest species. The adult flies do not eat, do not bite, and live only 5 to 8 days. Their sole purpose in the adult stage is reproduction. The larvae, which feed voraciously for approximately 14 days before pupation, are the production organism. A single female lays 500 to 900 eggs per clutch. The lifecycle from egg to harvestable prepupa takes approximately 18 to 21 days under controlled conditions, making BSF one of the fastest-cycling livestock systems on the planet.
This is waste-to-protein arbitrage. The feedstock is material that waste producers pay to dispose of: food processing residues, spent brewery grains, fruit and vegetable rejects, pre-consumer food waste. The larvae convert a disposal cost center (tipping fees of $50-100 per tonne) into a revenue-generating feedstock. The business model runs on three simultaneous income streams: waste gate fees, insect meal sales, and frass fertilizer sales.